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Following a hearing on Thursday, Feb. 12, Mississippi Judge Robert Whitwell granted Chambliss a temporary injunction against the NCAA, which makes the Mississippi star quarterback immediately eligible to compete for the Rebels for the 2026 season.

The NCAA will have the opportunity to appeal the decision.

‘The (NCAA) acted in bad faith to deny him an additional year of eligibility,’ Whitwell said during his ruling.

Should Thursday’s decision be upheld, Chambliss would receive a sixth season of eligibility after spending four seasons at Division II Ferris State and last season at Ole Miss.

The hearing was held at the Calhoun County Courthouse in Pittsboro, Mississippi, about 45 minutes from Ole Miss’ Oxford campus. Tom Mars, Chambliss’ lawyer, had said on social media that the case’s location gave them “a level playing field where Trinidad’s rights will be determined by the Mississippi judiciary instead of some bureaucrats in Indianapolis who couldn’t care less about the law or doing the right thing.”

Chambliss sued the NCAA in Lafayette County (Mississippi) Chancery Court on Jan. 16, seven days after the NCAA denied his eligibility waiver. Chambliss had appealed the NCAA’s initial decision, but the college sports governing body denied the appeal on Feb. 4.

In his waiver request, Chambliss sought to receive a retroactive medical redshirt for the 2022 season at Ferris State, when he was dealing with what he described in court documents as ‘recurrent throat infections, poor sleep quality, daytime fatigue and exercise-related discomfort” after a documented episode of infectious mononucleosis in 2020. Chambliss didn’t play a game for the Bulldogs during the 2022 season.

In Thursday’s hearing, NCAA attorney Taylor Askew said that Chambliss practiced during the 2022 season and that no records established in court noted that Chambliss missed football-related activities because of his tonsils.

During his testimony on Thursday, Chambliss said that Ferris State coach Tony Annese told him before the 2022 season that he’d receive a medical redshirt.

“Approval requires schools to submit medical documentation provided by a treating physician at the time of a student’s incapacitating injury or illness, which was not provided,” the NCAA said in a statement in its initial waiver denial. “The documents provided by Ole Miss and the student’s prior school include a physician’s note from a December 2022 visit, which stated the student-athlete was ‘doing very well’ since he was seen in August 2022. Additionally, the student-athlete’s prior school indicated it had no documentation on medical treatment, injury reports or medical conditions involving the student-athlete during that time frame and cited ‘developmental needs and our team’s competitive circumstances’ as its reason the student-athlete did not play in the 2022-23 season.”

Chambliss was one of the breakout stars of the 2025 college football season in his first season with Ole Miss after transferring in from Ferris State. 

He began the season as the Rebels’ backup, but assumed the starting role after quarterback Austin Simmons suffered an ankle injury in a Sept. 6 win at Kentucky. From there, he helped Ole Miss win a program-record 13 games and advance to the semifinals of the College Football Playoff. He finished the season with 3,937 passing yards, 22 touchdowns and three interceptions, as well as 527 rushing yards and eight touchdowns. He finished eighth in Heisman Trophy voting.

The Grand Rapids, Michigan, native had previously led Ferris State to a Division II national championship in 2024 before transferring from the school.

Despite not receiving an invitation to the NFL draft combine, Chambliss is widely regarded as an NFL prospect. Most mock drafts have him going between the third and fifth rounds of the 2026 NFL Draft, should he end up in the draft.

With Chambliss’ future in limbo, Ole Miss first-year head coach Pete Golding secured commitments from Auburn transfer quarterback Deuce Knight and Louisiana transfer quarterback Walker Howard.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Nick Castellanos’ time with the Philadelphia Phillies came to an end on Thursday, Feb. 12 with his release as the team began to gather for spring training.

The former Phillies outfielder wasted no time in penning a four-page handwritten letter, which he shared on his Instagram account, following the news of the release.

In the letter, Castellanos addressed Philadelphia fans and made an admission about the events that led to his eventual release, which he called the ‘Miami incident.’

‘As a veteran of the game of baseball, there are rules, and I broke one in Miami,’ Castellanos wrote. ‘After being taken out of a close ball game in front of my friends and family, I brought a Presidente (beer) into the dugout. I then sat right next to Rob and let him know that too much slack in some areas and too tight of restrictions in others are not conducive to us winning.’

‘Shoutout to my teammates and Howie for taking the beer out of my hands before I could take a sip (I appreciate you guys).’

The incident Castellanos refers to happened on June 16, 2025, in a game against NL East rival Miami Marlins. During a 5-2 Phillies win over the Marlins, manager Rob Thomson removed Castellanos in the eighth inning for defensive replacement Johan Rojas.

With Castellanos being from Davie, Florida, being just over 20 miles from Marlins Park, he took exception to being removed from the game. The next day, Thomson and the Phillies announced Castellanos was being benched for making an ‘inappropriate comment.’

‘One of the many things about Nick that I love is that he’s very emotional,’ Thomson said. ‘He loves to play, and he loves to play every inning of every game. I just thought last night he made an inappropriate comment after he came out, and so today, he’s not going to play. And I’m going to leave it at that.’

Castellanos revealed on Feb. 12 that it was not only his comments, but also his actions that led to his benching.

Despite the troubles near the end of his Phillies career, he showed an appreciation to the city and the fans in part of the letter he shared on social media.

‘To the people of city, thank you for showing up for the past four years,’ Castellanos wrote. ‘Applauding or booing, you were there.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A 44-year-old Slovakian man who planned to watch a hockey game at the Winter Olympics in Italy was arrested on Wednesday, Feb. 11 due to an outstanding warrant, Reuters reported.

The man had been on the run for 16 years before returning to Italy with plans to watch Slovakia’s hockey game against Finland, Reuters said.

Police were aware of his location after he checked into a guesthouse just outside of Milan and he was taken to the central San Vittore prison.

He is expected to serve 11 months and a week as punishment for a series of store thefts he committed in 2010, according to the Carabinieri (Italian military police).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The owner of the Baltimore Orioles is among the names found in the Epstein files released by the Justice Department.

Emails show David Rubenstein ― who is also the Carlyle Group chair ― met with Jeffrey Epstein in November 2012 and had potential plans for another meeting, but it appears that a second meeting did not take place.

A spokesperson for Rubenstein released the following statement to WBAL News Radio in Baltimore:

“Mr. Rubenstein had one meeting for 20 minutes in Carlyle’s office, at the request of people seeking Mr. Rubenstein’s participation in philanthropic endeavors, none of which were pursued by Mr. Rubenstein,” the spokesperson said.

‘A brief email thanking Mr. Rubenstein for the meeting also suggested a meeting between Mr. Rubenstein and Ehud Barak, which never occurred. There is nothing more to Mr. Rubenstein’s involvement than that innocuous interaction.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Legendary trainer John Shirreffs died in his sleep at age 80 in California, according to the Daily Racing Forum.

Shirreffs was based out of Southern California and guided several horses to success, including Zenyatta.

Shirreffs has played a role in winning the 2005 Kentucky Derby with Giacomo and three Breeders’ Cup championships with Zenyatta and Life Is Sweet during his career.

The horses under his watch have won 589 races in 3,589 starts with more than $58,581,916 in career earnings, according to Equibase.

Shirreffs remained active as a trainer with more than 30 horses in training, including Baeza and Westwood, at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, California.

‘He was a fixture at Santa Anita Park throughout his career and his legacy as a caring horseman will remain embedded in the fabric of our history,’ the racetrack posted on its Facebook page. ‘Every horse who races at Santa Anita must first pass by the statue of John’s greatest trainee, the wonderful mare Zenyatta.’

He spent the weekend in Florida to inspect 2-year-old horses that belonged to Lee and Susan Searing.

Lee Searing told the Daily Racing Forum that “Shirreffs was fighting an illness” during the recent trip.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A new attack ad from Republicans targeting U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff, D-Ga., is slamming the vulnerable Democrat senator for requiring entrants at his political rallies to show proof of identification, but arguing that identification requirements for voting are a form of voter suppression. 

Want to get into a Jon Ossoff rally?’ the advertisement’s narrator begins, before it goes into a montage of staffers at Ossoff’s Feb. 7 rally asking for entrants’ IDs.

‘Don’t forget your ID’ rally staff can be heard saying as folks walked into the Georgia International Convention Center located in metro Atlanta.

‘Also, do you have your ID with you?’ another staffer can be heard asking entrants in the video captured by a GOP tracker. ‘I’ll just grab your ID from you. Thank you so much,’ another said. Please have your IDs ready, please, thank you.’

Meanwhile, Ossoff has referred to attempts to establish stricter photo-identification rules for voting and voter registration in federal elections as ‘nakedly partisan, totally unworkable, [and] bad faith.’

Ossoff’s team declined to comment for this story. 

On Wednesday, Republicans in the House of Representatives passed the latest iteration of a voter integrity law aiming at requiring stricter in-person documentation requirements, such as needing a photo-ID to vote. This bill is a broader and stricter version of the 2025 version of the bill which focused predominantly on registering to vote as opposed to the act of voting itself.

Ahead of the vote’s passage, one of Ossoff’s Republican challengers in the upcoming U.S. Senate race in Georgia, Rep. Buddy Carter, R-Ga., called out the incumbent Democrat Senator for ‘once [saying] that voter ID was ‘right and appropriate,’ [but] now supports his party as reframing it as ‘voter suppression.”

‘The law didn’t change. Public opinion didn’t change. What changed was he – and other Democrat politicians like him – realized that illegal immigrants could no longer vote to keep Democrats in office,’ Carter asserted. ‘They oppose this bill because it chips away at their voting base; plain and simple.’

Despite Ossoff’s previous opposition to voter integrity laws, his campaign event framed the requirement for photo ID as a security measure.

‘Due to security requirements … be ready to show ID that matches our RSVP list and these arrival instructions (printed or on your phone),’ the campaign event’s confirmation email said.

Fox News Digital’s Leo Briceno contributed to this report.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

: A trio of Republican senators are moving to overhaul how federal childcare funds are distributed after what they call ‘mass fraud’ in Minnesota exposed a system that paid providers before verifying children were ever in the room.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, joined by senators Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rick Scott, R-Fla., is introducing the Payment Integrity Act, legislation that would require states to distribute federally funded childcare dollars based on verified attendance, not enrollment claims.

‘Programs in Minnesota for welfare and childcare were designed to channel resources into protecting vulnerable children but were treated like an open ATM by criminals,’ Cruz told Fox News Digital.

‘The mass fraud in Minnesota shows that American taxpayers can no longer rely on local and state politicians to prevent abuses because those politicians often have electoral and partisan incentives to look the other way. My legislation reduces the risk of the waste and fraud we’ve seen and ensures that resources are provided to children and families who need it.’

The bill would reverse a 2024 Biden administration rule requiring states to pay childcare providers before attendance verification. Under Cruz’s proposal, providers would be paid only after services are confirmed, shifting from enrollment-based payments to attendance-based billing.

Cruz’s bill comes as the outspoken Texan led a Senate Judiciary Subcommittee hearing on alleged Somali fraudsters last week. There, lawmakers heard directly from David Hoch, a journalist who accompanied blogger Nick Shirley to sites claiming to be Somali daycare centers.

Sen. Ted Cruz breaks down the high-stakes strategic fight for Greenland

‘There are few crimes more morally repugnant than stealing from vulnerable children. Every dollar stolen is a meal not eaten, a doctor’s visit missed and a future diminished,’ Cruz said, adding that such fraud ‘plunders our children’s potential.’

Gesturing toward a photo of the ‘Quality Learing Center’ in Minneapolis during the hearing, an alleged fraudulent childcare provider Cruz called ’emblematic’ of the crisis, he said the fraud was occurring not in ‘some distant or lawless place, but in the heart of America’s Midwest.’

Co-sponsor Lee said support for childcare should ‘go to real kids, not empty rooms.’

‘Fake childcare operations are stealing funding from the ones who are actually taking care of America’s children in need. Our bill will address this massive fraud by granting funding based on actual attendance rather than reported enrollment and allowing states to pay retroactively instead of in advance,’ Lee said, adding such ‘diligence’ should have been the law all along.

The Payment Integrity Act also puts into law the January rule from Health and Human Services that established attendance-based billing procedures.

That rule, according to Secretary Robert F. Kennedy’s deputy, Jim O’Neill, was also spurred by what has been happening in Minnesota.

‘We’ve seen credible and widespread allegations of fraudulent daycare providers who were not caring for children at all. The reforms we are enacting will make fraud harder to perpetrate,’ O’Neill said in a statement.

The Payment Integrity Act amends the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act signed into law by President George H.W. Bush, to include such ‘attendance-based billing.’

‘Nothing in this subchapter shall be construed to require a lead agency to make a payment to a child care provider prior to the provision of child care services,’ the bill states in a direct reversal of the prepayment system Cruz says allowed fraud to flourish.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

CHICAGO — Cardi B was part of Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show. What she did exactly, well, that turned into a perplexing question for two major prediction markets.

At least one Kalshi trader filed a complaint with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission over how the prediction market handled Sunday’s appearance by the Grammy-winning rapper. The result of a similar event contract on Polymarket also drew the ire of some users on that platform.

Prediction markets provide an opportunity to trade — or wager — on the result of future events. The markets are comprised of typically yes-or-no questions called event contracts, with the prices connected to what traders are willing to pay, which theoretically indicates the perceived probability of an event occurring.

The buy-in for each contract ranges from $0 to $1 each, reflecting a 0% to 100% chance of what traders think could happen.

More than $47.3 million was wagered on Kalshi’s market for “ Who will perform at the Big Game? ” A Polymarket contract had more than $10 million in volume.

Participants including Pedro Pascal, Karol G and Cardi B
Celebrities including Pedro Pascal, Karol G and Cardi B during the Super Bowl halftime show on Sunday.Kevin Mazur / Getty Images for Roc Nation

Cardi B joined singers Karol G and Young Miko and actors Jessica Alba and Pedro Pascal on a starry front porch during the halftime spectacle. She danced to the music, but it was unclear whether she was singing along during the show, which included performances by Ricky Martin and Lady Gaga.

Due to “ambiguity over whether or not Cardi B’s attendance at the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show constituted a qualifying ‘performance,’” Kalshi cited one of its rules in settling the market at the last price before trading was paused: $0.74 for No holders and $0.26 for Yes holders. The platform returned all the money to its users.

Polymarket’s contract was resolved as Cardi B had performed, but the yes was disputed. A final decision on the contract is expected to be announced on Wednesday.

In the CFTC complaint — first reported by the Event Horizon newsletter and posted by Front Office Sports — the trader alleges that Kalshi violated the Commodity Exchange Act with how it resolved the Cardi B contract. The trader — a Yes holder — is seeking $3,700.

A CFTC spokesman declined comment on Wednesday.

The Super Bowl capped a big NFL season for prediction markets.

Kalshi reported a daily record high of more than $1 billion in total trading volume on the day of the game, an increase of more than 2,700% compared to last year’s Super Bowl. The season-long total for all Super Bowl winner futures was $828.6 million, up more than 2,000% from last year.

The increased activity on Sunday caused some deposit issues. Kalshi co-founder Luana Lopes Lara posted on X on Monday that the “traffic spike was way bigger than our most optimistic forecasts.” She said the platform had reimbursed processing fees on the effected deposits and added credits to users who experienced delays.

Robinhood Markets highlighted the strength of its prediction markets when it announced its financial results for the fourth quarter and full 2025 on Tuesday.

“I think we are just at the beginning of a prediction market super cycle that could drive trillions in annual volume over time,” CEO Vlad Tenev said during an earnings call. “This year is going to be a big year. Olympics are going on right now. World Cup coming in the summer.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

During a performance by the group at the Las Vegas Sphere, AJ McLean floated the idea to the crowd on hand.

‘What do you guys think? Backstreet Boys: 2027 Super Bowl halftime,’ McLean said.

It wasn’t entirely clear whether McLean was joking, but his suggestion was unsurprisingly met with a chorus of cheers from the crowd on hand. That prompted him to continue pitching the possibility.

‘Let’s make it happen then,’ McLean said. ‘I mean, you know, why not, right? Why not? It’s in L.A. It’s right down the street. Let’s go.’

The Backstreet Boys have performed at the Super Bowl before, but they have never headlined the halftime show. The quintet was offered an opportunity to do so at Super Bowl 35 between the Baltimore Ravens and New York Giants in 2001, but they instead opted to sing the national anthem, as Nick Carter told Entertainment Tonight in 2021.

NSYNC and Aerosmith instead combined to headline the halftime show that year, which also featured appearances by Mary J. Blige, Britney Spears and Nelly.

Any Backstreet Boys fans will have to wait a while to see if the NFL listens to the group’s plea. The league typically doesn’t announce its Super Bowl halftime entertainment until its regular season begins.

Last year, Bad Bunny was revealed to be the Super Bowl 60 halftime performer on Sept. 28, 2025.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Everyone’s open for business. And there’s an awful lot of it for Major League Baseball teams to take care of over the next 40 days of spring training.

Pitchers and catchers are officially in and working out at all 30 camps, kicking off the game’s period of relative tranquility before the grind of 162 games and five weeks of playoff settle in.

Yet what unfolds in Florida and Arizona the next six weeks will surely frame what happens in the months to come. With that, USA TODAY Sports examines 30 issues worth monitoring among the Cactus and Grapefruit:

Philadelphia Phillies: Can Zack Wheeler clear all the hurdles?

The rib is sitting in a closet at home, Zack Wheeler told reporters in Clearwater, Florida, safely removed from his vascular thoracic outlet syndrome surgery. It can’t hurt him, and he kept it for posterity.

Now, six months removed from getting shut down and having to watch the Phillies bow out in the NL Division Series without him, Wheeler, 35, once again represents their best chance to separate from the NL pack.

He will not be ready for opening day, manager Rob Thomson intimated, though that artificial deadline doesn’t matter that much. Soon Wheeler, currently long tossing from 90 feet, will get up off a mound, progress as any pitcher might and, perhaps, get in some Grapefruit League games in March.

That would put him squarely in the middle of the six to eight months recovery time for his form of TOS surgery. And as stretched out and effective that Wheeler looks as March nears April, the less Philly may have to rely on prospect Andrew Painter – who may or may not be ready – and vets like Taijuan Walker to hold down the rotation.

No, Wheeler won’t clear every hurdle this spring. But getting closer to the finish line would make the Phillies far more imposing.

New York Mets: Will the new mix prove cohesive?

David Stearns’ January scramble drill brought the Mets another highly competitive, big-budget behemoth. One probably better than the 83-win dud in the first year of Juan Soto’s $765 million contract.

But that will involve disparate parts coming together, Bo Bichette learning third base with aplomb, a sentient right fielder emerging and the gaggle of first base/DH types sliding into roles.

Oh, and all this with All-Star shortstop Francisco Lindor missing all of spring training with a hamate injury.

‘We’ve got a fun group. Even these first couple days down here you can feel it,’ Stearns insisted the day before camp opened. ‘The guys are smiling, they’re having fun with each other.

‘We do have new faces here. But baseball is such a small community. It hasn’t felt, these first couple days, like we’re integrating a lot of new people.’

Ideally, the new-look infield of Jorge Polanco, Marcus Semien, Lindor and Bichette coalesces. And the 83-win bar set last year proves easy to clear.

Atlanta Braves: Still time to add more pitching?

The loss of Spencer Schwellenbach is fairly devastating for an Atlanta team that dipped under .500 for the first time since 2017 and was, somewhat rightfully, counting on internal improvement to make up much of the shortfall.

Schwellenbach’s elbow dislocation dampened their hopes last year and now, his inflammation in the same wing raises many questions about his 2026 season.

Yet the Braves are 0-0, and can triage this loss now, with a gaggle of available starting pitchers on the market. But they’re going quickly: Chris Bassitt came off the board on the first day of Orioles camp; a Lucas Giolito or similar arm slotted behind Chris Sale and Spencer Strider – both struck by injury woes last year, too – would give the squad more than a fighting chance.

Miami Marlins: Are young arms ready to seize opportunity?

It would be quite a gambit: Trading from pitching depth to acquire a slugging right fielder in Owen Caissie and then plugging the vacancy with quality rookie arms.

That would certainly be a best-case scenario for the Marlins, who knocked on the playoff door last year after playing excellent ball from late June on. Robby Snelling, Baseball America’s minor league pitcher of the year in 2023, bounced back from a 2024 dip to get his stock back up while Thomas White is a high-end prospect whose walk rate still raises eyebrows.

The Marlins signed Chris Paddack as a back-end stopgap. But solid springs for Snelling and White could bring the future closer to Miami than anticipated.

Washington Nationals: Will youth be served?

Once Blake Butera manages a Grapefruit League game, he’ll check one key box off his never-have-I-ever list: Holding forth in a big league dugout.

At 33, he’s the youngest major league manager since 1972, and comes highly regarded from the highly respected Tampa Bay Rays development apparatus.

Connecting with a projected roster where just one player – starter Miles Mikolas – is older than him shouldn’t be difficult.

‘I feel really prepared,’ he said the day before Nationals camp opened. ‘And ready to roll.’

Chicago Cubs: Will a mystery guest make them even deeper?

Adding Alex Bregman to a 92-win team is quite the power move. Yet are the Chicago Cubs even more all-in than it appears?

They held onto invaluable second baseman Nico Hoerner and turned Matt Shaw into a utility guy. And are set to see three of their starting pitchers walk after this year, too.

Which makes you wonder whether the club, connected in various forms to unsigned Zac Gallen virtually the entire winter, might see the right-hander come back to them before long. That would give them admirable starter depth and a hedge against the future.

Perhaps it won’t be as dramatic as Dexter Fowler’s 2016 return that portended a World Series title. But it would certainly spice things up.

Milwaukee Brewers: Faith no more?

Nothing quite like trading the ace of your 97-win team one month before spring training begins. It is the kind of maneuver that can damper a clubhouse spirit before workouts begin. Yet the Milwaukee Brewers are accustomed to such indignities.

Dealing Freddy Peralta to the Mets doesn’t leave the cupboard bare, though. It just turns a lot of hoped-for things into musts.

Like Brandon Woodruff getting north of 20 starts again. Jacob Misiorowski uninhibited by governors on his youthful arm. Logan Henderson looking ready to build upon a fantastic five-start cameo.

Throw in Quinn Priester and Chad Patrick, and there’s a path to Surviving Freddy. But that margin for error has narrowed a bit, where any hint of injury, regression or lack of polish may upset the formula.

Cincinnati Reds: A void in left field?

Left field at Great American Ball Park is a pretty sweet place to ply your trade. Not a lot of ground to cover and then a very hitter-friendly yard when there’s a bat in your hands.

Yet the Cincinnati Reds may fill that slot with a combo of J.J. Bleday (career OBP of .307, adjusted OPS 92) and Dane Myers (.299, 80).

It’s a curious pairing, though in Bleday, the fourth overall pick in the 2019 draft, there’s still the whiff of upside after he hit 20 homers in Oakland in 2024. He regressed in almost every category in ’25, though, and was non-tendered by the A’s.

Myers provides speed but little pop, though both would give the outfield a fairly elite defensive look with TJ Friedl flanked by them and right fielder Noelvi Marte, who has proven a very quick study out there.

Will this alignment last all spring? Or might the Reds kick the tires on Nick Castellanos if/when the Phillies must release him? Stay tuned.

St. Louis Cardinals: How close is JJ Wetherholt?

The St. Louis Cardinals’ rebuild has indeed filled up a farm system that ranks in the upper third of the majors, thanks largely to depth amassed in their many trades. But JJ Wetherholt is the guy everyone’s dying to see.

A relative steal with the seventh overall pick in 2024, Wetherholt nearly knocked down the door to Busch Stadium last year, when he slashed .306/.421/.510 and stole 23 bases in 26 attempts across AA and AAA ball.

Now, the trade of Brendan Donovan to Seattle opens up a slot at second base. The allure of pairing Wetherholt up the middle with Gold Glove shortstop Masyn Winn is undeniable. And Wetherholt’s spring plate appearances will certainly bear watching.

Pittsburgh Pirates: Does the Konnor Griffin era begin now?

Speaking of gifted young middle infielders, Konnor Griffin does not turn 20 until April. But he does move fast.

The young man got married over the winter, coming off a year he hit 21 homers with a .941 OPS across three levels, finishing at Class AA in his first pro season. Increasingly, it’s simply a matter of ‘when’ and not ‘if.’ That said, the Pirates might be putting an awful lot on the young man by tossing him out there opening day after a winter they sparked relative hope with a handful of moves to improve the offense.

Then again, the Paul Skenes era is entering Year Three. If nothing else, Griffin gives Bucco fans in Bradenton something to train their eyes upon the days Skenes doesn’t pitch.

Los Angeles Dodgers: How slow will they play it?

Beyond their checkbook championships, the Dodgers have displayed an uncanny ability to get a crew of oft-injured pitchers just right for the playoffs. Snell and Tyler Glasnow, most notably, struggled to stay upright until the lights shone the brightest last year – and then they saved their season.

As for this year? Playoff hero Yoshinobu Yamamoto is pitching for Japan in the WBC. Not ideal, given the body blows he took last fall.

Conversely, youngsters like River Ryan, Gavin Stone and Landon Knack, along with last year’s phenom, Rōki Sasaki, are all healthy. The Dodgers could roll with an 11-man rotation if they wanted.

And the ramp-up through the Cactus League may yet reveal a few more arms who might need a siesta early to make sure they’re available late.

San Diego Padres: Is Joe Musgrove ready to roll?

Easy to forget the San Diego Padres won 90 games last year, this with Dylan Cease giving up more damage than his numbers might have indicated. Now, Cease is in Toronto – and a former rotation stalwart is hoping to be ready to replace him.

Now, his performance may determine whether the Padres can sustain their consistent level of contention: With Nick Pivetta and Michael King atop the rotation, anything resembling the Musgrove of old would give them a solid chance to play .550 or better ball and unlock another playoff spot.

San Francisco Giants: Will skipper accidentally call spring training ‘Fall Ball?’

We kid, we kid. Tony Vitello’s unprecedented leap from Knoxville to the NL West has gone swimmingly so far, the San Francisco Giants’ early arrivers believing in this unprecedented hire.

Still, though, until he manages a regular season game, it’ll be interesting to chart how he handles the 40 days and nights that lead up to the opener.

And no pressure: Opening night is simply a standalone Netflix game against Aaron Judge and the Yankees.

Vitello’s doing OK, though. He named Logan Webb his opening day starter – not his Friday night starter.

Arizona Diamondbacks: Will the oldies stay golden?

Spring training’s a time for veteran dispensation: An extra day off, a hall pass from bus trips that are too long, early checkout time from a workout.

Well, there’s a lot of Arizona Diamondbacks who can claim those extra privileges.

The Diamondbacks’ late winter run netted them experience, and lots of it: Nolan Arenado will turn 35 and first baseman Carlos Santana 40 in April. Re-signed ace Merrill Kelly is 37. Lefty Eduardo Rodriguez and catcher James McCann will soon be 33 and 36, respectively.

They’re certainly in the right spot. Who wouldn’t want to retire to the Valley of the Sun – or at least play ball a little while longer?

Colorado Rockies: Are the lab rats ready for Coors Field?

The Paul DePodesta era is almost certain to get weird. And the manner in which the new club president added to the rotation at winter’s end seemed to buttress that.

Oh, in a vacuum, they were totally normal maneuvers: Signing veteran starters Michael Lorenzen, Jose Quintana and Tomoyuki Sugano to one-year deals. It’s just that a team likely bound for another 100-loss campaign doesn’t necessarily dip into the veteran market in that fashion.

After all, what’s the difference between 96 and 106 losses, say?

But all three pitchers bring such divergent skill sets to the table, it’s almost like DePodesta will take the year and workshop what does and doesn’t work in Coors Field. For now, those three will be living a little easier in the Cactus League. The Coors missiles will be flying soon enough.

New York Yankees: Can they avoid the spring injury bug?

Sure, the Yankees can be just fine with ‘Run It Back+Ryan Weathers’ as a 2026 strategy. Yet a fairly placid offseason leaves them deficient in the depth department.

Their past two springs were clouded by Gerrit Cole’s elbow woes – first a 2024 shutdown from March until late June, and then last spring when his UCL got gone for good. With seven of their 13 position players north of 30, the spring aches might hit a little harder.

There is something of a cavalry coming: Shortstop Anthony Volpe will soon return from shoulder surgery and Cole and Carlos Rodón will buttress the rotation, their recoveries inspiring the club to acquire the lefty Weathers to hold down the fort.

Yet save for outfielder Jasson Dominguez and veteran non-roster invite Paul DeJong, it gets pretty thin just beneath the surface. Staying upright this spring – and there’s nine dudes headed to the World Baseball Classic, including a No. 99 in red, white and blue – is paramount.

Toronto Blue Jays: Time to shake off the ‘hangover?’

It’s tough to repeat, as we learned over the past quarter century. Yet it should theoretically be just as tough to get back to the World Series after getting to Game 7 and losing, right?

The Blue Jays would hope that’s not the case. It largely bodes well they shook up the mix from a club that fell two outs shy of a championship, with Dylan Cease and Cody Ponce bolstering the pitching staff for this and future years.

Yet the loss of Bo Bichette will be significant, for a club that relied on his contact and clutch hitting abilities. No one can move the baseball like Bo, unless Ernie Clement’s 30-hit postseason is a harbinger of his next 162 games.

February hasn’t been kind already: Anthony Santander likely out for the year, Shane Bieber very questionable for the opening spin through the rotation. Perhaps any ‘hangover’ won’t show up until later in the year, when the effects of a longer 2025 might be felt.

Baltimore Orioles: Can Pete Alonso lift the vibes?

The Polar Bear is simply irrepressible, and one day into Orioles camp, Pete Alonso was already making himself conspicuous, signing autographs, working with pitchers on PFP, chirping during live batting practice.

No telling if Alonso – signed to a five-year, $155 million deal – is the salve for a once-boisterous young Orioles core whose last year and a half was a desultory and injury-plagued slog. Spring narratives – ‘We love the new guy!’ – can often be so much eyewash, but Alonso, who averaged 42 homers per 162 games in seven seasons with the Mets, very well could be the presence the younger Orioles need.

Not that Alonso is ancient, but at 31, he’s still got at least three years on the O’s regulars, flourished in New York, won Home Run Derbys. Not a bad dude to shake it up.

Boston Red Sox: Did they get their swagger back?

A three-year playoff drought in Boston ended thanks in large part to Alex Bregman – who promptly broke containment and landed with the Cubs. What’s left behind is a funky infield alignment relying heavily on oft-injured Marcelo Mayer and Milwaukee refugee Caleb Durbin.

But what if these Red Sox get their swagger from the other side of the ball?

Importing Sonny Gray from St. Louis and signing Ranger Suarez away from Philadelphia suddenly gives this club a very deep rotation. And perhaps the fringe benefit is nudging the uber-talented Brayan Bello down a couple notches, a bit less pressure to unlock his greatness. Johan Oviedo, acquired from Pittsburgh, brackets this group.

It’s not as sexy as nabbing a bona fide wallbanger for the Green Monster. But it’s daunting, nonetheless.

Tampa Bay Rays: Can they survive a Lowe-free environment?

For the first time since 2017, the Rays will not have a Lowe on the roster, shocking when you consider that for a few years there, three Lowes might have found their name in the lineup.

Yet Brandon – the only one of the bunch who pronounces it ‘Lowe as in Ow’ – was traded to Pittsburgh. Josh was dealt to the Los Angeles Angels.

And once again, the Rays’ deck has been significantly reshuffled.

They also dealt Shane Baz and his nasty repertoire of pitches to Baltimore, and nabbed Gavin Lux from Cincinnati to play second base. Yet with each passing year, it seems far less likely the Rays’ devil magic will pay off, not in a division with four rivals firing on virtually all competitive cylinders.

Oh, they never seem to plumb a new Lowe. But this spring will once again bring a bevy of introductions – and hopes that it all works out.

Detroit Tigers: OK, who’s the No. 5 starter?

Oh, what a glorious problem to have in Motown.

With the late signing of lefty Framber Valdez and even later signing of Justin Verlander, the cover charge to crack the Tigers’ rotation is suddenly exorbitant.

Consider: Four of the five are All-Stars. Three are World Series champions. Two have Cy Young Awards on their shelf and one – Tarik Skubal – is the greatest pitcher in baseball at the moment.

OK, so nothing in baseball is permanent and this set-up is very temporary. Skubal is a free agent, Verlander is on a one-year deal, Valdez can opt out after two and Jack Flaherty is in the final year of a two-year contract.

But what a moment in time. Even if it relegates 2025 All-Star Casey Mize to the five hole.

Cleveland Guardians: Is it finally Chase DeLauter’s time?

OK, the dude is barely 24 years old. Yet two injury-plagued years in the minor leagues kept Cleveland’s top prospect from completing the journey to the big leagues just as he’d drawn so close. The Guardians did toss him into his major league debut during the ALDS.

Yet this spring will be his center field job to lose, and the Guardians, always offensively challenged, can certainly use his minor league career .384 OBP and .888 OPS. Cactus League performance may help force the Guardians’ hand.

Kansas City Royals: Can Jac Caglianone connect?

A couple weeks into Kansas City Royals camp, Jac Caglianone and Vinnie Pasquantino will depart for Team Italy and its bid for World Baseball Classic glory. And perhaps that diversion will be good for the second-year player.

He struggled in a 62-game debut, batting .157, striking out 23% of the time and failing to unlock the massive power that prompted the Royals to draft him sixth overall in 2024.

Now, the Royals need him, fairly desperately. The lineup drops off precipitously after a fab four of Maikel Garcia, Bobby Witt Jr., Salvy Perez and Pasquantino. One more big bat would lengthen it nicely.

Chicago White Sox: Which Munetaka Murakami will show up?

Let’s be real: The verdict won’t be in on the Japanese slugger for quite some time. It simply remains a great mystery how he fell to the White Sox for a fairly modest $34 million guarantee – modest relative to Murakami’s NPB pedigree.

There’s nothing quite like freaking out over February-March exhibition baseball. So whether Murakami’s K concerns come to the fore, or he knocks balls toward Loop 101 with regularity, it will make for great spring drama either way.

Minnesota Twins: Is Luke Keaschall the future?

Oh, we won’t know that based on a handful of Grapefruit League games. But Keaschall had one of the game’s low-key fantastic debuts last season, debuting April 18, knocking seven hits in his first 19 at-bats but then suffering a fractured forearm getting hit by a pitch.

He sat out more than three months, then produced a .294/.359/.436 line in 42 games, accumulating 2.0 WAR in 49 games overall. The second base job is waiting for him, along with the potential to bring some sunshine to a franchise that can’t seem to shake out of a spiral.

Seattle Mariners: Time to walk the walk?

There’s little reason for Seattle to show up to camp with anything short of swagger. The Mariners broke a 24-year drought by winning the AL West, came just eight outs shy of a World Series berth and have multiple superstars in their midst.

They were tough to miss at the Super Bowl, with Cal Raleigh, Josh Naylor, Bryan Woo and friends decked out in Seahawk gear. Now, coming off a year they beat back the Astros by three games, they’ve added All-Star second baseman Brendan Donovan to the mix.

They should win the AL pennant. And we’d love to see a little swag along the way.

Houston Astros: Will Isaac Paredes last the spring?

Nothing worse than a walking trade rumor that lasts all the way into spring training. This year, it just might be Isaac Paredes’ turn.

With the Astros believing they’d hold off the Mariners last August, the club acquired old friend Carlos Correa to play third while Paredes was injured. Well, they fell short, Correa is signed through 2028 and now there’s an abundance of infielders in Houston.

In a perfect world, the Astros could have flipped Paredes for an outfielder. As it stands, the alignment is uninspiring, with Jesus Sanchez, Zach Cole and Jake Myers playing most days, and Cam Smith hoping to regain the club’s confidence after he faded late in his rookie year.

Texas Rangers: Can MacKenzie Gore reach the next level?

There’s not much MacKenzie Gore can do this spring to convince us he’s ready to be a full-fledged ace. No, that time won’t come until, say, July, when Gore started to hit the wall last year after an All-Star first half.

His splits: 3.02 ERA and 11.3 strikeouts per nine innings before the break – and 6.75/8.6 after.

Still, the Rangers leaped at the chance to acquire him from Washington. They’ll have six weeks to unlock this very talented arm. And we may have to wait a few months to see if the tinkering in the Arizona sun leads to a second-half payoff.

Athletics: Can West Sacramento lock down another star?

It’s a nice little nest egg the A’s are building for Las Vegas, with Brent Rooker, Tyler Soderstrom, Jacob Wilson and Lawrence Butler all locked into multiyear deals that stretch beyond the three years the franchise is spending in Yolo County.

Can they do the same with Nick Kurtz? Well, they’d be insane not to try.

Kurtz was a stunning revelation in winning Rookie of the Year, crushing 36 homers with a 1.002 OPS, racking up 5.4 WAR in just 117 games and displaying preternatural abilities to adjust within an at-bat.

Let’s face it: The young man is going to get paid, significantly. He still has two more years of the club unilaterally controlling his salary, a hammer the A’s hold for only so long, the clock ticking once again come Opening Day.

Some say Kurtz might be foolish to sign long-term, given his earning potential. It’d be equally foolish of the A’s not to make a nine-figure commitment to try, and this spring is the best time to do so.

Los Angeles Angels: Is Grayson Rodriguez a hidden gem?

As the Los Angeles Angels reported to camp Feb. 10, there was one sight that must have looked particularly sunny: Grayson Rodriguez, throwing a bullpen session.

The one-time Orioles prodigy, acquired for outfielder Taylor Ward, hasn’t thrown a regular season pitch since July 31, 2024. The Orioles couldn’t wait around for his litany of physical woes to clear up.

So the Angels acquired him and goodness, it’s not easy to find such a big arm with four years of club control. Now, we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves. But each Cactus League hurdle Rodriguez clears toward Opening Day enhances the chances the Angels might have wisely procured a piece of their future.

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